If there was any doubt that the English language is and always will be a work in progress, the following fact should end it: LOL is a word. As in, an honest-to-goodness, in-the-Oxford English ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Phrases like A/S/L and TTYL may have bit the dust post-chatroom era. But there’s one term from the early days of the Internet that ...
LOL is 25 years old. Since its first recorded use in May 1989, LOL has completely transformed how we live. We text it to each other. We write it on pictures of animals. We say it out loud if we want ...
Save this article to read it later. Find this story in your account’s ‘Saved for Later’ section. I’m literally dying at the way Jessica Bennett’s recent piece in the New York Times about hyperbole ...
Even if your conversational partner can’t hear you laughing or see you smiling, it’s important to express your appreciation of a joke or a funny story. The many popular options can be boiled down into ...
You know those millennials who pepper every text with an “lol” or emoji like it’s life support? Anna Gaddis (@annagaddis) is one of those people — and she’s clapping back at the haters. In a recent ...
Phrases like A/S/L and TTYL may have bit the dust post-chatroom era. But there’s one term from the early days of the Internet that continues on as a major part of our lexicon: LOL. It’s an acronym, a ...